Håkan Ringberg
Lund University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Håkan Ringberg.
Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2007
Liselotte Högberg; Patricia Geli; Håkan Ringberg; Eva Melander; Marc Lipsitch; Karl Ekdahl
ABSTRACT Using data from an ongoing Swedish intervention project, the observed durations of nasopharyngeal carriage of penicillin-nonsusceptible Streptococcus pneumoniae (PNSP) (MIC of penicillin G of ≥0.5 μg/ml) stratified by both pneumococcal serogroup and age of the carrier were compared. The means and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) were estimated by fitting a gamma distribution to the observed duration of carriage for each age and serogroup stratum. The mean observed duration of carriage for all cases was 37 days (95% CI, 35 to 38 days). Children below the age of 5 years carried PNSP for significantly longer periods (43 days; 95% CI, 41 to 45 days) compared with older individuals (25 days; 95% CI, 24 to 27 days). There were also differences within the group of cases below the age of 5 years, as the duration of carriage became significantly shorter for each increasing age step: <1, 1 to 2, and 3 to 4 years. In addition, patients <5 years of age carried serogroups 9 and 14 for significantly shorter periods than groups 6 and 23. Serogroup 9 was also carried for significantly shorter periods than group 19. For patients aged 5 years or older, no significant difference in carriage duration for different ages or serogroups could be noted. As young children have the longest duration of PNSP carriage, interventions aiming to reduce the prevalence in this group are of great importance. The results highlight the importance of taking both serogroup and age of the carriers into account when studying the dynamics of pneumococcal transmission in young children.
Scandinavian Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2006
Håkan Ringberg; Ann Cathrine Petersson; Mats Walder; P. J. Hugo Johansson
In order to evaluate the value of bacterial cultures taken from the throat, 266 patients with MRSA were retrospectively assessed. At the time when MRSA was first detected in the patient, the most frequent sites positive for MRSA were a skin lesion (110 patients, 41%), the anterior nares (109 patients, 41%), and the throat (102 patients, 38%). In 26%, 17%, and 17% of the patients, a skin lesion, the anterior nares, and the throat, respectively, were the only site where MRSA was seen. In 123 patients cultured for MRSA because of a close contact with an already known MRSA patient, 65 patients (53%) were positive for MRSA in their throat and in 40 patients (33%), throat was the only sample site with MRSA at the time when the patient was found to be MRSA positive. 146 of the 266 patients (55%) were colonized with MRSA in the throat any time throughout the period they were MRSA positive. We conclude that throat is an important reservoir for MRSA and that samples taken from the throat should be included in screening patients for MRSA.
Scandinavian Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2007
P. J. Hugo Johansson; Eva Gustafsson; Håkan Ringberg
In a 6-y period, 114 household contacts connected to newly diagnosed MRSA patients screened for MRSA in the southern part of Sweden. In 22 of 51 (43%) families, 1 to 4 household contact(s) connected to a MRSA patient were positive for MRSA. In the 22 families, 42 of 60 (70%) household contacts were positive for MRSA and transmission of MRSA occurred between adult couples, parents and children, grandparent and children and between siblings. Within a family, MRSA-positive family members had in all but 1 instance identical MRSA strain genotypes (spa types) making intrafamilial spread of MRSA highly probable. MRSA transmission among household contacts may contribute to the prevalence of MRSA in the community and failure to identify MRSA in household contacts may maintain MRSA colonization in an already known MRSA patient. MRSA screening of family members living in the same household as a known MRSA patient should therefore be considered.
Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2010
Mikael Stenhem; Åke Örtqvist; Håkan Ringberg; Leif Larsson; Barbro Olsson-Liljequist; Sara Hæggman; Mats Kalin; Karl Ekdahl
Knowledge of different risks for infection will improve control measures.
Scandinavian Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2011
Anna-Karin Larsson; Eva Gustafsson; Anna Nilsson; Inga Odenholt; Håkan Ringberg; Eva Melander
Abstract Background: The duration of colonization with methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) is not well known and there is debate as to whether a patient colonized with MRSA ever can be defined as ‘MRSA-negative’. Methods: Since 2003 all notified MRSA cases have been systematically followed in Skåne County, southern Sweden. Cultures are taken from the nares, throat, perineum and possible skin lesions. Contact tracing is conducted. The screening program continues as long as cultures are positive and then until 1 y of consecutive negative cultures for MRSA is completed. Results: Of the 578 MRSA cases during 2003–2006, 535 were included in this retrospective study. The median duration of colonization with MRSA was 5.9 months. Having household contacts with MRSA, young age, spa-type t002 and colonization in 2 or more locations, were significantly associated with a longer duration of colonization. Having a clinical infection treated with antibiotics (compared to clinical infection with no antibiotic treatment or asymptomatic carriage) was significantly associated with a shorter carriage time. Eradication treatment was associated with a shorter carriage time. Conclusion: These results may have implications for the management of patients with MRSA carriage. The study indicates that MRSA carriage can be defined as ‘negative’ in a follow-up program and shows the importance of performing contact tracing among household members.
BMC Infectious Diseases | 2006
Mikael Stenhem; Åke Örtqvist; Håkan Ringberg; Leif Larsson; Barbro Olsson-Liljequist; Sara Hæggman; Karl Ekdahl
BackgroundThe occurrence of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) has gradually become more frequent in most countries of the world. Sweden has remained one of few exceptions to the high occurrence of MRSA in many other countries. During the late 1990s, Sweden experienced a large health-care associated outbreak which with resolute efforts was overcome. Subsequently, MRSA was made a notifiable diagnosis in Sweden in 2000.MethodsFrom the start of being a notifiable disease in January 2000, the Swedish Institute for Infectious Disease Control (SMI) initiated an active surveillance of MRSA.ResultsThe number of reported MRSA-cases in Sweden increased from 325 cases in 2000 to 544 in 2003, corresponding to an overall increase in incidence from 3.7 to 6.1 per 100000 inhabitants. Twenty five per cent of the cases were infected abroad. The domestic cases were predominantly found through cultures taken on clinical indication and the cases infected abroad through screening. There were considerable regional differences in MRSA-incidence and age-distribution of cases.ConclusionThe MRSA incidence in Sweden increased over the years 2000–2003. Sweden now poises on the rim of the same development that was seen in the United Kingdom some ten years ago. A quarter of the cases were infected abroad, reflecting that international transmission is now increasingly important in a low-endemic setting. To remain in this favourable situation, stepped up measures will be needed, to identify imported cases, to control domestic outbreaks and to prevent transmission within the health-care sector.
Foodborne Pathogens and Disease | 2008
Vishal Singh Parihar; Gloria Lopez-Valladares; Marie-Louise Danielsson-Tham; Inoka Priyadarshani Peiris; Seved Helmersson; Magnus Unemo; Birgitta Andersson; Malin Arneborn; Elizabeth Bannerman; Sukhadeo B. Barbuddhe; Jacques Bille; Lajos Hajdu; Christine Jacquet; C. Johansson; Margareta Löfdahl; Gunnel Möllerberg; Håkan Ringberg; Jocelyne Rocourt; Ingela Tjernberg; Jan Ursing; Birgitta Henriques-Normark; Wilhelm Tham
Since 1986, 68% of the Listeria monocytogenes isolates from human cases of invasive listeriosis in Sweden are available for retrospective studies. The aim of the present study was to characterize 601 human invasive isolates of L. monocytogenes in Sweden from 1986 to 2007 by using serotyping and pulsed-field gel electrophoresis. Since 1996, serovar 4b was permanently reduced to the second or third most common serovar in human cases in Sweden. During the latter period, 2000-2007, only 13% belonged to serovar 4b and 71% to 1/2a. The dendrogram, based on pulsovars, reveals two clusters with different serovars. Cluster 1 exhibits serovars 4b and 1/2b, whereas cluster 2 consists of serovar 1/2a. Serovar 1/2a seems to be more heterogeneous than serovar 4b.
Scandinavian Journal of Infectious Diseases | 1991
Håkan Ringberg; Anders Thorén; Anders Bredberg
Coagulase-negative staphylococci (CNS) are the commonest microorganisms in blood cultures, and sorting out patients with CNS septicemia from sample contamination a persistent problem. We prospectively evaluated 73 patients with CNS-positive blood cultures during 1 year and analysed the corresponding 122 isolates in order to determine the rate of septicemia and define the role of microbiological markers of identity such as plasmid profile for that purpose. Three patients had true septicemia, all of them with implanted foreign devices. The plasmid analysis, being the most reliable identity marker, had its greatest implication in reducing the intermediate group of patients clinically suspected of septicemia from 12 to 4. Strict clinical criteria and serial blood cultures are most important in sorting out patients with CNS septicemia from cases of sample contamination. In high risk patients--critically ill with implanted foreign devices--plasmid analysis or other reliable markers of identity are of great additional value.
Acta Paediatrica | 2007
Eva Gustafsson; Håkan Ringberg; P. J. H. Johansson
Aim: To determine if children adopted to Swedish families from countries with a high carrier rate of methicillin‐resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) are infected or colonized with MRSA.
Scandinavian Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2004
Liselotte Högberg; Birgitta Henriques Normark; Håkan Ringberg; Karin Stenqvist; Hans Fredlund; Patricia Geli; Katarzyna Grabowska; Eva Melander; Martin Laurell; Christina Åhrén; Eva Törnqvist; Rosmarie Fält; Dag Höglund; Gunnel Möllerberg; Karl Ekdahl
Policies for handling cases of penicillin-non-susceptible Streptococcus pneumoniae (PNSP) in day-care groups vary between different counties in Sweden. The aim of this study was to evaluate the epidemiological effect of excluding PNSP-carriers from childrens day-care centres (DCC). We followed the incidence in 14 DCC groups with ongoing PNSP-spread, by repeated group screens until no further cases could be identified. All identified carriers were excluded from DCC attendance in study area A (Skåne region) while they remained in the group in study area B (Göteborg and Örebro), according to local policies. The intervention effect was evaluated by comparing the number of additional cases after the baseline screen (start of the intervention period) between the 2 study areas. All PNSP-isolates were characterized by resistance pattern, serotype and pulse-field gel electrophoresis. The relative risk for children in DCCs without active intervention was 6.4 (95% CI: 2.0–20.7). Each prevented case in area A can be estimated to have demanded the exclusion of 2 other children from day care for approximately 4 weeks each. The total cost-benefit outcome of this action has to be seen in the light of the local situation with regard to the population prevalence and the distribution of other risk factors.